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Pues aún no ha publicado, no veo la fecha pero se mantiene en buenos niveles.
Si alguien encuentra algo
http://www.thinkchildcare.com.au/investors
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Boom time for corporate childcare in Australia
Parents paying up to $190 a day for childcare places are propping up $1 billion in profits for private childcare operators and their landlords, with questions being asked about who is really benefiting from billions in taxpayer subsidies for the sector.
Eight years after the spectacular collapse of Eddy Groves' ABC learning, once the biggest childcare provider in the world, corporate interests have returned to the sector. Research analysts rate childcare "an investment-grade asset".
The childcare services industry made almost $1 billion in profit last year, or more than one-eighth of what the government put into it in fee subsidies, according to IBISWorld's July report on the industry. (That figure does not include the property owners' profits.)
Increasingly childcare is big business, with about half of all childcare services (including out of school hours care and family daycare operations) provided by for-profit businesses, according to the Productivity Commission.
But in long day care, where 660,000 kids are, it's more like two-thirds delivered on a for-profit basis. That's where most corporate activity is happening, and where the demand is.
There has been huge growth to catch up with demand for long daycare places – in 2010 there were about 5900 long daycare centres nationally, according to Colliers International, but now there are well over 6800, according to the regulator ACECQA.
This growth has included several companies making big profits from the sector, either as operators of centres or as centre landlords (see "The companies cashing in" below).
At what cost?
But with some parents struggling to get a place and others paying upwards of $190 a day in inner-city areas, costs to the taxpayer of a staggering $10 billion a year in parent subsidies, and childcare workers among the lowest paid in the country, exactly who is winning from our childcare system?
http://www.smh.com.au/national/educa...09-gslgx2.html
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Ya tenemos a la bebé rozando los máximos históricos. Dejémosla que vaya creciendo, es muy pequeña aún.
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Iniciado por
jerez1
Ya tenemos a la bebé rozando los máximos históricos. Dejémosla que vaya creciendo, es muy pequeña aún.
Babby boom en Australia. Tiene potencial, el crecimiento puede ser muy bueno
http://bluestudies.com/baby-boom-pre...ers-australia/
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Iniciado por
jerez1
Se ha puesto en máximos históricos
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La empresa quiere crecer y adquiere tres nuevos centros.
Hr de Ayer
http://www.asx.com.au/asxpdf/2016112...72r7v81y8m.pdf
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Agradecimiento de Posts / Me gusta - 1 Gracias, 0 Me gusta
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Iniciado por
jerez1
Brutal deficit de centros para cuidar niños en Australia. La empresa puede crecer a buen ritmo
Growing demand for childcare services in Australia is driving fees up and forcing parents to register their kids on waiting lists as soon as they are born. Some are working less in order to care for their children.
PUBLISHED: DEC 3, 2016, 5:00 AM SGT
http://www.straitstimes.com/asia/aus...ildcare-crisis
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Agradecimiento de Posts / Me gusta - 1 Gracias, 1 Me gusta
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Espero crecimiento espectacular para próximos años
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